Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Conceptualizing and Categorizing Race and Ethnicity in Health Services Research
View through CrossRef
Objectives. Veterans Affairs (VA) patient populations are becoming increasingly diverse in race and ethnicity. The purpose of this paper is to (1) document the importance of using consistent standards of conceptualizing and categorizing race and ethnicity in health services research, (2) provide an overview of different methods currently used to assess race and ethnicity in health services research, and (3) suggest assessment methods that could be incorporated into health services research to ensure accurate assessment of disease prevalence and incidence, as well as accounts of appropriate health services use, in patients with different racial and ethnic backgrounds.Design. A critical review of published literature was used.Principal Findings. Race is a complex, multidimensional construct. For some individuals, institutionalized racism and internalized racism are intertwined in the effects of race on health outcomes and health services use. Ethnicity is most commonly used as a social–political construct and includes shared origin, shared language, and shared cultural traditions. Acculturation appears to affect the strength of the relationships among ethnicity, health outcomes, and health services use.Conclusions. Improved and consistent methods of data collection need to be developed for use by VA researchers across the country. VA research sites with patients representing specific population groups could use a core set of demographic items in addition to expanded modules designed to assess the ethnic diversity within these population groups. Improved and consistent methods of data collection could result in the collection of higher‐quality data, which could lead to the identification of race‐ and ethnic‐specific health services needs. These investigations could in turn lead to the development of interventions designed to reduce or eliminate these disparities.
Title: Conceptualizing and Categorizing Race and Ethnicity in Health Services Research
Description:
Objectives.
Veterans Affairs (VA) patient populations are becoming increasingly diverse in race and ethnicity.
The purpose of this paper is to (1) document the importance of using consistent standards of conceptualizing and categorizing race and ethnicity in health services research, (2) provide an overview of different methods currently used to assess race and ethnicity in health services research, and (3) suggest assessment methods that could be incorporated into health services research to ensure accurate assessment of disease prevalence and incidence, as well as accounts of appropriate health services use, in patients with different racial and ethnic backgrounds.
Design.
A critical review of published literature was used.
Principal Findings.
Race is a complex, multidimensional construct.
For some individuals, institutionalized racism and internalized racism are intertwined in the effects of race on health outcomes and health services use.
Ethnicity is most commonly used as a social–political construct and includes shared origin, shared language, and shared cultural traditions.
Acculturation appears to affect the strength of the relationships among ethnicity, health outcomes, and health services use.
Conclusions.
Improved and consistent methods of data collection need to be developed for use by VA researchers across the country.
VA research sites with patients representing specific population groups could use a core set of demographic items in addition to expanded modules designed to assess the ethnic diversity within these population groups.
Improved and consistent methods of data collection could result in the collection of higher‐quality data, which could lead to the identification of race‐ and ethnic‐specific health services needs.
These investigations could in turn lead to the development of interventions designed to reduce or eliminate these disparities.
Related Results
Mindy Calling: Size, Beauty, Race in The Mindy Project
Mindy Calling: Size, Beauty, Race in The Mindy Project
When characters in the Fox Television sitcom The Mindy Project call Mindy Lahiri fat, Mindy sees it as a case of misidentification. She reminds the character that she is a “petite ...
Race, Ethnicity, and War
Race, Ethnicity, and War
Numerous forms of violence and armed conflict in human history have been pursued and justified by deploying the concepts of ethnic and racial difference. Race and ethnicity are soc...
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The UP Manila Health Policy Development Hub recognizes the invaluable contribution of the participants in theseries of roundtable discussions listed below:
RTD: Beyond Hospit...
Osteopathic medical students’ understanding of race-based medicine
Osteopathic medical students’ understanding of race-based medicine
Abstract
Context
Race is a social construct, not a biological or genetic construct, utilized to categorize people based on obser...
Conceptualizing Ethnicity: How Dimensions of Ethnicity Affect Disparities in Health Outcomes Among Latinxs in the United States
Conceptualizing Ethnicity: How Dimensions of Ethnicity Affect Disparities in Health Outcomes Among Latinxs in the United States
Background: This study considers how attributional and relational dimensions of ethnicity affect Latinxs’ health outcomes.Methods: Using regression methods to analyze data from th...
Methods to Establish Race or Ethnicity of Twitter Users: Scoping Review (Preprint)
Methods to Establish Race or Ethnicity of Twitter Users: Scoping Review (Preprint)
BACKGROUND
A growing amount of health research uses social media data. Those critical of social media research often cite that it may be unrepresentative of...
Disparities by race/ethnicity in unplanned cesarean birth among healthy nulliparas: a secondary analysis of the nuMoM2b dataset
Disparities by race/ethnicity in unplanned cesarean birth among healthy nulliparas: a secondary analysis of the nuMoM2b dataset
Abstract
Background
Racial disparities exist in maternal morbidity and mortality, with most of these events occurring in healthy pregnant people. A ...
Ethnic variation in prevalence, self-reported barriers and outcome of cataract surgery in a rural population in southwestern China: the Yunnan minority eye study
Ethnic variation in prevalence, self-reported barriers and outcome of cataract surgery in a rural population in southwestern China: the Yunnan minority eye study
Abstract
Background
As a part of the Yunnan Minority Eye Studies, the purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence, barriers and visual acuity outcomes of cataract surgery...

